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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Expression of two myeloid cell-specific genes requires the novel transcription factor, c-fes expression factor.

The protein product of the c-fes proto-oncogene has been implicated in the normal development of myeloid cells (macrophages and granulocytes). We have previously shown that 151 base pairs of c-fes 5'-flanking sequences are sufficient for myeloid cell-specific expression and include functional binding sites for Sp1, PU.1, and a novel nuclear factor (Heydemann, A., Juang, G., Hennessy, K., Parmacek, M. S., and Simon, M. C. (1996) Mol. Cell. Biol. 16, 1676-1686). This novel hematopoietic transcription factor, termed FEF (c-fes expression factor), binds to a cis-acting element that is located at nucleotides -9 to -4 of the c-fes promoter between two Ets binding sites (at -19 to -15 and -4 to +1) which bind PU. 1. We now show that a FEF binding site exists in the myeloid cell-specific regulatory region of a second gene, the -2.7-kilobase pair enhancer of chicken lysozyme. The lysozyme FEF site is immediately 5' to a PU. 1 site, analogous to their arrangement in the c-fes promoter, and allows the formation of a preliminary FEF consensus site, 5'-GAAT(C/G)A-3'. This consensus site does not match any sites for known transcription factors. Importantly, although PU.1 binds immediately 3' of the FEF site in both the c-fes promoter and the chicken lysozyme enhancer (CLE), we show that they bind independently. The FEF sites are required for high levels of transcription by both the CLE and the c-fes promoter in transient transfection experiments. Importantly, elimination of the CLE FEF site abolishes all transcriptional activity of this enhancer element. Mutation of the adjacent PU.1 site in either the c-fes promoter or the CLE, reduces activity by approximately 50%. Therefore, transcription of both lysozyme and fes in myeloid cells requires FEF and PU. 1. UV cross-linking experiments show that the FEF binding activity consists of a single 70-kDa protein in both human and murine cell lines. FEF binding activity is not affected by antibodies that specifically recognize a number of cloned transcription factors. Collectively, these data indicate that we have identified a novel transcription factor that is functionally important for the expression of at least two myeloid cell-specific genes.[1]

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